They Dumped Nan At My Door—Then She Whispered Box 5821-Teptep

They left Geneva at Callie’s door just after eight in the morning, when the street still smelled of rain and cold bins waiting to be collected.

Callie had opened the door expecting a delivery, a neighbour, or perhaps nothing more dramatic than someone asking whether the car outside was hers.

Instead, she found her grandmother sitting on a folding chair in the drizzle.

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Geneva’s cardigan was buttoned unevenly, her skirt was stained, and her slippers did not match.

For one strange second, Callie could not make the scene become real.

There was the woman who had raised half the family from a kitchen table, sitting on a front step as if she had been returned to the wrong address.

There was Uncle Joel near the van, one hand on the driver’s door, his face already set in that hard, bored expression people wear when they have practised being cruel.

And there was Dakota beside him, phone in hand, sunglasses perched on her head though there was no sun to speak of.

“Here’s your grandmother,” Joel said.

His voice carried across the wet pavement as if he were discussing an old chair nobody wanted.

“We’re tired of looking after her. Now do something useful for once.”

Callie’s hair was still wet from the shower, and her dressing gown clung awkwardly at the waist.

She gripped the doorframe because she suddenly did not trust her legs.

“What have you done to her?” she asked.

Geneva looked smaller than Callie remembered.

Not just older.

Reduced.

She sat with her hands curled in her lap, one thumb rubbing the other, eyes moving uncertainly from Callie to the street to the open doorway behind her.

Joel gave a shrug.

“Nothing. She’s old. She wanders, shouts, breaks things, accuses people. The house was impossible to manage, so we sold it.”

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